Luminous fireball lights up the pre-dawn sky over Colorado (video)



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At least dozens of people said they saw a brilliant fireball over Colorado on Sunday morning (October 3).

The American Meteor Society (AMS) listed more than 40 reports in three states, primarily in the Denver area, around 4:30 a.m. CDT (5:30 a.m. EDT; 10:30 a.m. GMT). Observers saw the meteor at least as far south as Santa Fe, New Mexico; the two cities are separated by approximately 400 miles (640 kilometers).

Video: Fireball over Colorado captured by multiple cameras
Related:
5 amazing fireballs captured on video

A surveillance camera captured this view of a fireball over Hartsel, Colorado (approximately 100 miles, or 160 kilometers southwest of Denver), at 4:31 a.m. local time on October 3, 2021. (Image credit: © Baxcam / American Meteor Society)

A resident of Evergreen, Colo., Reported that the flash was so bright it charged his solar-powered lights, according to a local CBS report. A robotic astronomical observatory in the Colorado Rockies called Cloudbait Observatory captured the footage on its cameras, the report added – and various Colorado doorbell cameras also spotted the flash.

The fireballs are the result of slightly larger meteors – fragments of space dust – that hit Earth’s atmosphere at high speed. Pieces of a meteor rarely make it to the ground, and these pieces are called meteorites.

A camera view of the fireball doorbell about 50 miles southeast of Denver at 4:31 am local time. (Image credit: Amy R./AMS)

No one has reported meteorites from this Colorado fireball yet, although local scientists are watching and asking the public to report anything they find. Suspicious meteors should not be touched with bare hands so as not to contaminate them, as oils and microbes on your skin can degrade space rock, according to NASA. Our sister site LiveScience has a brief guide to finding meteorites.



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